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Drying marks on film


neil_miller1

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Please help me! I am having terrible trouble with drying film - the sheets look OK after they come out of the wash, but dry with outlines of runs and areas of lighter/darker density where water has drained off. The puzzling thing is some sheets come out perfectly! On average, about 50% of the sheets I dry are affected to a greater or lesser extent by these marks.

 

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I've tried everything I can think of - the water in my area is hard and used to leave chalky deposits, so I tried deionised water which was a bit better. I then invested in an RO system which eradicated the deposits entirely and has almost resulted in no drying marks at all on roll film, however sheet film is still affected and so is 35mm to an ever greater degree.

 

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I have used a tank to wash the film in with water feeding in from the bottom and out at the top. I have used wetting agent and found even more marking and runs. I have tried hypo eliminator at the correct interval during the washing sequence and am not sure that it has had any noticeable effect.

 

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For 5x7 sheet film I leave the film in the unicolor drum after processing and rinse with 600mm of water on the motor base for 1 minute. This is emptied out and another rinse (same vol.) for 2 mins, followed by 5 more rinses of 5 mins duration each rinse. The film comes out clearer and more evenly developed than I've ever seen it, but after drying in my durst hot-air dryer it has these horrible marks all over it.

 

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I know the marks are caused during drying as I can see from the gelatin where the marks will be - where the water has cascaded off the sheet, following a roughly diagonal path echoing the way the film has been hung. The marks are on the emulsion side - the other side is perfectly clear. The marks will not wash-off - they have become areas of low density in the middle of the mark with a ring of darker density at the fringes.

 

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I hope some of you can help, as this is driving me nuts - all my careful work and planning is being ruined by something that I have semmingly no control over.

 

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Sorry about the rant.

 

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Neil.

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I personally purchased distilled water to mix with my chemistry, make

sure that I give my fix about 25% more time than my film developer

time (T-Max film to make sure that the anti halation layer gets

completely eliminated in my drums), keep my washes short at two

minutes each (in my JOBO) and use a minimum of ten washes and do not

use any hpo eliminator of photo flow at all. Because my new darkroom

is still about two months from completion, I just air dry the negs in

my bathroom after introducing a short amount of humidity into the air

by running the shower for a short period. I make sure that my forced

air furnace does not kick in during the drying period. My negatives

come out clean and completely without drying marks and dust. Good

Luck

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I had the same problem - my film had drying streaks on certain frames

that left the densities uneven. I then tried what a previous post

already mentioned - the final step of photoflo mixed with distilled

water - it worked, and the negatives had even density and no

streaking.

 

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I took the older film which already had the streaks, resoaked it,

then applied the photoflo and distilled water, and they dried fine.

So I recommend that you do that with your film that has the problems -

hopefully it will work for you, and you won't have any lost negatives.

 

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Good luck!

 

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James Webb

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I almost wonder if what you have are development marks and not the

effects of drying.

 

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I had some serious problems with Agfa 120 films. I had processed

thousands of 35 mm

rolls (literally I worked for a newspaper) without any trouble but I

often would get

uneven development with 120 film processed the same way. So I

started to use a running

water pre-wash as well as stop bath. (Stop bath wasn't even

AVAILABLE to use at the

newspaper! Not that it mattered) After these changes my film

development problems went completely away.

 

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The use of stop bath was suggested just so the development was

instantly halted over the

entire surface of the film. We hacks had just used a water rinse

between developer and

fixer and with the bigger negative perhaps some development was

still progressing on

parts of the film area, while it had stopped (so to speak) on some

areas.

 

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The next time I became unhappy with development was when I started

processing 8x10

film. I had been using a Unicolor drum and roller to process two

sheets of 4x5 film at a

time. I used about three ounces of developer solution and had been

getting good results,

so I tried it with the 8x10 and had really bad, uneven development.

Everyone I talked to

recommended increasing the volume of developer solution so now I use

about eight

ounces. I've increased the volume of volume of developer solution

for 4x5 as well since I

think that I was sailing pretty close to the wind with just three

ounces.

 

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I should add that I use a running water pre-wash for all of my film

processing from 35

mm (now that I'm no longer a hack) right up to 8x10.

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